Feature
Presentation: Oscar Micheaux
Oscar Micheaux was born on January 2, 1884 in Metropolis, Illinois and died on March 25, 1951 in Charlotte, North Carolina. In the interim, he became the first African-American to direct, write, and produce a feature-length film, The Homesteaders (1919). He would go on to make more than forty more throughout his prolific career, including Within Our Gates (1920), which appears to be a response to D.W. Griffith's negative portrayal of blacks in The Birth of a Nation (1915). In a time when they were generally portrayed in demeaning roles, Micheaux's films depicted African-Americans and their community in a more positive light. But Micheaux was much more than a filmmaker. He was a writer as well and wrote seven novels in all, including his first, The Conquest: The Story of a Negro Pioneer (1913), which relates his experiences as a homesteader in South Dakota as a young man. The most successful book that he wrote was The Case of Mrs. Wingate (1945), which he published, distributed, and promoted on his own. Late in his life he gave this response to why he published his own books:
Today, Oscar Micheaux's legacy is still alive. In March 2001, the city of Great Bend, Kansas (one of his adopted homes as well as his burial site) hosted a "Golden Anniversary Memorial Celebration" celebrating his very rich contribution to society. Here are some sources for learning more about Oscar Micheaux and his legacy:
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